There
have been several bits of disastrous news in the energy area in the
past few days. Firstly, a
Greenpeace report saying that global coal and natural-gas
extraction threatens to increase fossil-fuel emissions by a fifth by
2020, jeopardizing efforts to stem rising temperatures; secondly,
that an Australian company is claiming a find of large
quantities of shale oil in NW Australia; thirdly, that the
Russians are entering
the race for shale oil; a finally, that an oil-hungry China is
entering the race for hydrocarbons in the Arctic.
This,
absolutely confirms that conventional production of oil has, or is,
peaking and that countries are having to opt for secondary sources
that have have such a poor energy return that they will never be
financially viable – and ruinous for the economy.
That
humanity is having to opt for sources of energy that are so filthy
that they will add hugely to greenhouse gas emissions, is testament
to a worldwide race to extinction.
As
Guy McPherson says so eloquently: “hooray ... we're fucked, again!”
The
Resource Race:
China
Dips Toes in Arctic Waters
China
is hungry for natural resources, and the Arctic is home to a wealth
of them. Growing alarm about its ambitions has led Beijing to take a
softer approach, stressing exploration and research over exploitation
Christoph
Seidler
25
January, 2013
You
didn't hear much Chinese spoken on the Mackenzie River until the
summer of 1999. But then excitement swept through the sleepy
Tuktoyaktuk settlement in Canada's Northwest Territories, when a vast
ship with a crew from the Asia-Pacific unexpectedly docked in the
port. Local authorities were caught off-guard by the arrival of the
research icebreaker Xue Long, which means "snow dragon."
The vessel -- 170 meters (550 feet) long and weighing 21,000 metric
tons -- had in fact informed faraway Ottawa of its intention to sail
into Canada's arctic waters, but the message hadn't been passed on.
Today,
such an incident probably wouldn't happen. States around the North
Pole keep careful and regular watch on visitors from China. Its
"growing interest in the region raises concern -- even alarm --
in the international community," the Stockholm International
Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) recently wrote. And this despite the
fact that "the Arctic is not a foreign policy priority" for
Beijing.
The
equation seems simple. China is hungry for natural resources, and the
Arctic is rich in natural resources. What could be more
straightforward? But Beijing insists that its interest in the region
is first and foremost for research purposes, that the Arctic can help
shed light on climate change, that it offers useful shipping routes,
and so on and so forth.
Indeed,
for now, the Chinese government has no official Arctic strategy. And
it doesn't say much at all about natural resources in the region,
especially because the economic superpower can -- for the time being,
at least -- get what it needs elsewhere, such as in Africa.
But
this is also because it has realized that it needs to be subtle about
its interest in the polar North and not upset Arctic nations any more
than it already has. "Currently, China has not carried out any
exploration activities in the Arctic," said Zhao Yun, Beijing's
ambassador to Norway, on Monday at the Arctic Frontiers Conference in
Tromsø. China is more interested in joining forces with other states
to study "trans-regional issues," he stressed.
Demonstrating
great diplomatic finesse, Zhao insisted that Beijing was keen to
communicate and cooperate with all relevant parties, including, of
course, the indigenous population. It would also welcome a chance to
be granted observer status on the Arctic Council. So far, so
friendly.
A
Careful Message
Even
though China is trying to avoid being overbearing, it can't hide its
growing interest in the region. "They are extremely careful
about what message they send," says Leiv Lunde, director of the
Fridtjof Nansen Institute, and independent foundation concerned with
environmental, energy and resource-management policies based in
Lysaker, Norway. Lunde recently returned from a trip to China, where
he had delivered a 90-minute speech at the Beijing Energy Club.
Afterwards, he spent over two hours fielding questions from
government officials, researchers and executives from raw-material
companies.
Still,
Lunde believes that Chinese companies have understood that although
oil and gas from the Arctic could make a long-term contribution to
the country's energy supply, it won't come cheap. China will have to
"play by the rules of capitalism," Lunde says. Right now,
for example, the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC)
wants to acquire its Canadian competitor Nexen, but the deal first
has to be approved by US authorities.
Beijing's
raw-materials managers are also eyeing Greenland. Just outside the
capital, Nuuk, a British company has teamed up with Chinese
financiers to develop a giant iron ore mine. Over 2,300 Chinese
workers will be employed here, boosting the island's population by 4
percent. The total investment will be around €1.7 billion.
Greenland
needs it -- at least if it is ever to make its dream of independence
come true. Sara Olsvig is a member of the Danish parliament who
represents a separatist party in Greenland. She points out that, as
of 2040, Greenland's state coffers will be seeing a shortfall of some
€134 million a year. "We are interested in securing additional
income," she says. "And where should we look for that if
not in the fastest-growing nations of the world?"
So
far, Olsvig says, no decisions have been made, but Chinese investment
in Greenland's mining sector would be as welcome as investment from
any other country. "China is all over the world. It is no
surprise that they are also interested in Greenland's resources,"
she says. The iron ore mine project is, however, not uncontroversial
in Greenland. Among other things, critics are unhappy about the
prospect of China bringing low-cost labor to the island.
Long-Term
Planning
Traditionally,
China has upheld the principle of non-intervention. Accordingly, at
the conference in Tromsø, the Chinese ambassador to Norway resorted
to a linguistic slight of hand to justify his country's focus on the
Artic region: Northeastern China, Zhao explained, stretches almost to
50 degrees north latitude, making his country what he called "a
near-Arctic state." According to that logic, the German island
of Sylt, which lies at 54 degrees north latitude, could also be
described as "near-Arctic" -- but no one would.
"China's
arctic research is still at the starting stage," Zhao said. In
2004, China -- like many other countries, including Germany -- set up
a research station on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen. Meanwhile,
the Polar Research Institute in Shanghai trains scientists
specialized in the region, while another 120-meter-long icebreaker is
currently being built with Finnish help.
The
Xue Long has now made five trips to the Arctic. The last was in the
summer of 2012, when it traveled from Iceland via the North Pole to
the Bering Strait. As it entered the waters off Spitsbergen, the
Norwegian coast guard was there in an instant -- in stark contrast to
Canada's casual response back in 1999.
"China
spends much more on research in the Antarctic than the Arctic,"
cautions Lunde, from the Fridtjof Nansen Institute. For now, using
Antarctica's natural resources is prohibited by the Antarctic Treaty
System. But that ban might be lifted in the decades to come. "Maybe
they are just preparing themselves," says Lunde. "China is
very good at long-term thinking."
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